Sterling Homes Corp. v. Anne Arundel County

695 A.2d 1238, 116 Md. App. 206, 1997 Md. App. LEXIS 104
CourtCourt of Special Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 27, 1997
Docket1620, Sept. Term, 1996
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 695 A.2d 1238 (Sterling Homes Corp. v. Anne Arundel County) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Special Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sterling Homes Corp. v. Anne Arundel County, 695 A.2d 1238, 116 Md. App. 206, 1997 Md. App. LEXIS 104 (Md. Ct. App. 1997).

Opinion

DAVIS, Judge.

On July 13, 1992, the Office of Planning and Zoning (OPZ) for Anne Arundel County refused to issue Sterling Homes Corporation (appellant) a permit to construct a marina bathhouse and parking lot (Bathhouse Permit) on three waterfront acres contiguous to a planned community called Stoney Beach. The proposed bathhouse and parking lot were to be followed by the completion of a commercial marina on the three acres. Appellant filed an appeal from this decision with the Anne Arundel County Board of Appeals (the Board) on August 10, 1992. After five days of testimony, the Board refused the permit, holding that OPZ properly denied the Bathhouse Permit and that comprehensive rezoning had occurred before *210 appellant was able to obtain a vested right in its proposed use of the site. Appellant appealed this decision of the Board to the Circuit Court for Anne Arundel County. On August 1, 1996, the circuit court (Robert H. Heller, J.) issued a thorough Memorandum Opinion and Order affirming the Board’s decision. Appellant appeals from that judgment, presenting a single question for our review, which we rephrase:

Did the circuit court legally err in affirming the decision of the Board to deny appellant’s permit application?

We hold that the circuit court committed no error.

FACTS

In 1984, appellant, through its engineering firm, applied for approval to subdivide a sixty-acre parcel of waterfront property upon which it would construct the townhome community of Stoney Beach. At the time, fifty-seven acres of the land were zoned R15, a classification that permitted low-density multifamily dwellings. The remaining three acres were zoned MA2, which would allow a light-use commercial marina. The subdivision application consisted of sixteen plats; fifteen plats covered the R15 area (residential site), and the remaining plat covered the MA2 area (marina site). The preliminary plan showed 461 townhomes on the residential site. Plat sixteen, covering the marina site, contained a notation that it was a “Reserved Parcel—Zoned MA-2.” It contained no details about a marina. It did contain a notation that “Any future construction with this Parcel will be subject to review and approved by the Office of Planning and Zoning.” Likewise, neither a September 1985 traffic analysis report, nor the Chesapeake Bay Critical Area reports prepared by appellant in April 1985, mentioned a commercial marina on the site. 1 *211 The circuit court made reference, however, to a memorandum sent to OPZ on April 22, 1995, that stated that “a conceptual plan for the marina zone portion of the property [had] been prepared.”

The County contended that, at the time of the initial subdivision application, appellant’s plans for plat sixteen were unformed. Frank Ward, OPZ’s project coordinator when the proposed subdivision was reviewed, testified at the Board hearing that “Reserved Parcel,” in the context of the Anne Arundel County Code, “is a reference given to a property that is not approved for a building parcel in conjunction with a subdivision.” According to Ward, such a notation is given in order that an unplanned parcel included within a subdivision application may have some type of designation, without indicating any future plans for the site. Ward explained, “[W]hen property is submitted for subdivision review, the entire property has to be shown in one form or another. We can’t just leave a piece of the property hanging out there for lack of a better term.” 2

*212 David Thaler, an engineer, testified for appellant that the notation “reserved parcel” meant that the marina site was reserved for future MA2 use, which would include a commercial marina. 3 Sterling Leppo, appellant’s president, testified that he understood the notation to mean that the marina site was reserved for a commercial marina use at some future date. Appellant also argues that, at the time of the review of the subdivision plans, Ward knew that appellant planned a commercial marina on plat sixteen. Ward testified that he told Ken Colbert, an engineer for appellant, to “either show a plan for the marina so we can include it in the subdivision, or set it up as a reserve parcel, which would defer submittal of any development plans on those areas until the developer knows exactly what he’s going to do within that area.” Ward also testified, however, to his recollection that Leppo intended to defer any action on the marina site until “some time in the future.”

Appellant’s final subdivision plats were approved by OPZ in November 1985, and recorded. Appellant then began construction of the community, which it maintains was to proceed in four phases. The first phase included the construction of the infrastructure for all portions of the property and the construction of some of the townhomes. The second and third phases included the construction of most of the homes in the middle of the property. According to appellant, the marina was to be completed during the last phase, when there would be sufficient financing and built-in demand from already occupied homes to complete it and the last 128 residences. At the time of final plat approval, appellant did not pay the fees required for commercial development and did not obtain a sewer and water allocation for the marina site.

*213 The OPZ refused to issue construction permits until appellant obtained all of the necessary public works agreements. Allegedly delayed by litigation over the ownership of the main access road to the property—ownership that appellee denied—appellant waited at least a year before obtaining a declaratory judgment in the circuit court that appellee owned the road. That judgment was issued in December 1986.

In November 1986, Anne Arundel County began the process of rezoning the entire county. In March 1987, the County released a map indicating the proposed zoning changes, including the proposed rezoning of appellant’s property from R15/MA2 to R5, a less dense usage residential classification that, the Board and the circuit court stated, would support a community-owned marina (by special exception), but not a commercial marina. Appellant’s counsel objected to the proposed rezoning in April and December 1988, and January 1989, to no avail. The Council passed the zoning ordinance on July 19, 1989, and gave final approval on July 28. The rezoning went into effect on September 11,1989.

On March 20, 1987, two and one-half years before the rezoning went into effect, OPZ issued a grading and construction permit for appellant’s property. The permit covered the entire sixty-acre property, including the marina portion, and allowed appellant to construct bulkheads and revetments along the shoreline to support the grading work. The circuit court accepted, arguendo,

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Bluebook (online)
695 A.2d 1238, 116 Md. App. 206, 1997 Md. App. LEXIS 104, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sterling-homes-corp-v-anne-arundel-county-mdctspecapp-1997.